I accidentally left my receipt at the self-checkout machine. I didn’t even realize it until a woman rushed toward me in the parking lot, waving it in the air like it was something urgent.
“You dropped this,” she said with a gentle smile. I thanked her, thinking nothing more of it. Just a kind stranger doing a kind thing.
Later that afternoon, I unloaded my groceries and tossed the receipt on the counter. That’s when I noticed writing on the back — the pen strokes rushed, uneven, almost shaky:
“Check your bank account.”
My heart skipped. I immediately opened my banking app — and froze. There it was. A charge I didn’t make. Not a small one either. Someone had used my card information for a purchase that clearly wasn’t mine.
I rushed back to the store, showed the manager, and canceled my card on the spot. If that woman hadn’t noticed something — if she hadn’t taken the time to warn me — who knows how much more could’ve been taken.
I’ll never forget her face, or how she didn’t ask for anything, didn’t look for credit — just quietly stepped in to help a stranger.
Sometimes angels don’t have wings.
Sometimes they wear regular clothes and return a forgotten receipt.